The spotted amphibian may already
be at risk of extinction, a new study says. Go to http://bit.ly/2A4SFcs, scan to
bottom of page for video.
Researcher discovered the
jaguar-snouted tree frog on a former highway in Brazil.
PHOTOGRAPH BY RAFAEL DE FRAGA
By Elaina Zachoa, National
Geographic, 11/23/17
Scientists have discovered a new
species of tree frog in an unusual place—a stretch of abandoned highway in Brazil.
When herpetologists first heard
male frogs calling in the Amazon rain forest, they suspected the unknown sound
came from a species completely new to science. Rafael de Fraga, a
herpetologist at the National
Institute of Research of the Amazon, and colleagues later confirmed
it via genetic analysis.
The team named the species Scinax
onca, or the jaguar snouted tree frog, due to its spotted skin and the
prevalence of big cats they
found in the area.
"During the sampling
expeditions we were also lucky enough to spot several jaguars," says de
Fraga, who noted the sightings unnerved some of his team.
But, he noted, "the highway
is definitely more dangerous than jaguars [because] many people have died there
by car crash or fallen bridges.”
The newfound frog is the 27th
species of Scinax—the snouted genus of tree frogs—known from the Amazon Basin.
There are more than 800
species of tree
frogs worldwide. (Read
about three warty toad species found in Brazil.
The confluence of the Purus and
Madeira Rivers where the frog lives is "very special from a biological
point of view," de Fraga says. That's because it is home to a diverse
array of species, including the closely related Scinax iquitorum tree
frog.
A Fleeting Find?
So far, not much is known about
the newly identified creature, described in a recent study in the journal
Zookeys.
The orange-eyed frog measures
less than two inches and has a white groin with black spots. It's also sexually
dimorphic, meaning female frogs are larger than males.
De Fraga says the amphibian's scratchy
call sounds like a woodsaw, and the male's mating trill lasts a little over 100
milliseconds. (See more
tree frog pictures.)
"[The discovery is] not a
huge surprise, but it's indicative of kind of a push within Brazil to
understand the environment," says Darrel
Frost, curator emeritus at the American Museum of Natural History,
who wasn't involved in the study.
Although about one new
species discovered in the Amazon every other day, species
are dying out before they're even identified. Amphibians
in particular are disappearing at alarming rates, due to
factors such as the deadly
chytrid fungus and deforestation.
.
De Fraga suspects the frog is
endangered, and is further imperiled by plans to recover the derelict highway,
which will likely lead to habitat destruction for several species.
"We are not totally opposed
to the highway recovering, because many local people live completely isolated
from basic resources such as hospitals," de Fraga says.
"But it is rather disturbing
to watch the region being converted into urban areas without any concern for
the biodiversity that is being lost."
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